Browns shut out Bills in snow

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CLEVELAND (Ticker) -- Special teams were indeed special for the
Cleveland Browns.

Playing their most meaningful regular-season home game in five
years, the Browns defeated Buffalo, 8-0, in blizzard conditions
on Sunday.

Phil Dawson punched through a 35-yard field goal and an
improbable 49-yarder, while Jamal Lewis rushed for 163 yards on
33 carries to lead Cleveland.

"When this organization set out nine years ago, it kind of
envisioned this is what Cleveland Browns football is all about,"
Dawson said. "A game late in the year, at home, with a chance
to go to the playoffs in just horrible weather and the Browns
coming out on top."

Cleveland was seeking to clinch a playoff berth for the first
time since 2002 but were denied when Tennessee defeated Kansas
City.

The Browns had to survive a late drive by the Bills, who moved
60 yards to the 10-yard line and faced a fourth down with 16
seconds to play.

The Bills attempted a screen pass, but safety Sean Jones broke
through to take down Fred Jones and end it with three seconds to
play as Cleveland recorded its first shutout since November 20,
2005.

"It worked earlier in that drive," Buffalo quarterback Trent
Edwards said. "Obviously, the Browns thought we were going to
put it into the end zone. It was there, but it was just a
matter of blocking the guys up front and making others miss."

Two inches of snow blowing in gusting winds of up to 43 miles
per hour seemed to bother the Bills (7-7) much more so than the
Browns.

The weather conditions also played a factor in another score for
the Browns.

With Cleveland leading. 3-0, a snap sailed over the head of
Bills punter Brian Moorman. As the ball rolled into the
snow-covered end zone, Moorman kick it out of bounds for the
safety to give the Browns a 5-0 lead with 13:48 to play in the
first half.

After Buffalo punted, Cleveland started on its own 7 and marched
62 yards in 10 plays to the Bills 31.

Dawson's 49-yard field goal attempt was a low line drive which
skipped off the extension and fell through the uprights with
1:22 left in the half.

"We knew we were going to need every point we could muster up,"
Cleveland quarterback Derek Anderson said.

The kick brought back memories of Dawson's bank-shot field goal
which put the game against Baltimore on November 18 into
overtime - which the Browns won, 33-30.

"In my nine years here, this was by far the most difficult day
to kick a football," Dawson said.

"When I saw it go through I was elated," Cleveland coach Romeo
Crennel said. "The importance of being up eight points in a
game like this is huge."

The second half for Cleveland was all about field position and
not making a critical mistake.

At 7:52 of the third quarter, Browns punter Dave Zastudil
dropped a 56-yard punt on the Buffalo 1-yard line.

The Browns were able to burn considerable clock behind Lewis,
who racked up his fourth 100-yard rushing game of the season and
the 34th of his career. In the process, Lewis became the eighth
Cleveland Brown player to crack 1,000 rushing yards.

"Jamal is just the type of back for this kind of weather,"
Browns offensive tackle Joe Thomas said. "He carried the pile
and that's what he was doing the whole fourth quarter."

Cleveland had to survive one final bit of adversity when Moorman
dropped a 50-yard punt on the Browns 3 with 6:08 to play. But
the sure-handed Lewis came to the rescue with runs of 13 and
nine yards to give his team some breathing room.

"I was so excited when I woke up this morning," Lewis said. "I
told the running backs to get ready because we're going to run
the football."

The loss essentially eliminated the Bills from the playoff
chase. Buffalo hasn't been to the playoffs since the 1999
season.

"They made more plays than we did," Bills coach Dick Jauron
said. "I thought our young guys performed pretty well in these
conditions and a lot of them have never been in it before. This
is the worst (weather conditions) I can recall ever being
involved in."